The bursting of the housing bubble will mark the onset of a severe US recession that will last for many years. When you compound the impact of Peak Oil and skyrocketing energy prices, we may never recover from this at all.
In a nutshell, 2005 marks the best of the Industrial Age. This is as good as it gets. Looking back to the housing peak of August 2005 several years from now, we will yearn to relive those heady days of easy HELOCs, 50% rise in home prices, easy refinancing, the fun of buying million dollar homes with zero down and enjoying shiny BMWs, SUVs and Hummers. It will all seem like a dream.
The bursting of the dot com bubble was managed by inflating the Housing Bubble. There are no more bubbles to create. We have hit a brick wall. The effects of the bursting housing bubble will be far more widespread. Let me explain:
During the Tech Bubble, the effect was limited to those wealthy enough who earned real money to buy the stocks. You had to have money to play the game. It was limited to the upper middle class and rich. Most were well educated.
There was no entry fee or qualification level to join the Real Estate Ponzi Scheme. Every janitor, valet operator, and store clerk making minimum wage could get an Interest Only/Option ARM with Zero Down simply by providing a Social Security Number on their loan application and entering an imaginary salary. The bar was set too low. Home ownership boosted to a record 70% with several speculators owning multiple properties. Soon a point had to be reached where there were no more buyers left - this was as large the Pyramid could physically grow.
As with all Ponzi Schemes, it collapses on itself when it stops growing. The housing bubble will take down the poor, clueless, uninformed and the middle class who bought into the American Dream. Their million dollar I/O loans will become their American Nightmare. The biggest hoax of the century has been carefully packaged, sold and disseminated amongst the general population who were brainwashed into believing a false mantra - Real Estate never goes down.
So take one last loving look at your SUV, RV, family photos of your Alaskan/Hawaiian Cruise, 4000 sq ft McMansion, second vacation home and 73 inch DLP HDTV with 7.1 surround sound. No other generation in the history of our nation has enjoyed so much free wealth and so much comfort by doing so little. Our forefathers could have never imagined using their home as an ATM machine.
The key to true wealth lies in Savings and having a Production Economy. Today we have negative savings, our National Debt has soared past $8.5 Trillion. Our high tech jobs have been moved offshore to India and all our production and manufacturing has been shifted to China.
Look friends - what we have left here is just a hollow shell. A shell that has been propped up by the housing and service industry. We have been increasing our paper wealth by traded housing with one another. Most of the citizens just hang on to their minimum wage service jobs. We maintain a flashy lifestyle with easy HELOC money. 70% of our economy is consumer driven.
Now that home prices are falling, the equity is vanishing. The shell is getting thinner and is about to fall like a house of cards. We have to borrow over $2 billon a day just to run the Federal Govt. Our total debt is over $44 Trillion. How long can this rigged game continue? What happens when the US dollar finally collapses? With a weak dollar the US consumer has to deal with astronomical rises in energy prices. Price of crude could easily shoot beyond $200 a barrel in a few years. Ignore the temporary drop at your gas pump. Consider this the election effect.
As the US consumers purchasing power erodes away, demand falls domestically while energy prices continue to rise in the International Market - can we say Stagflation?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergySpin', '
')Watch Krugman's analysis of the
bubble as well.
Thanks EnergySpin for linking that excellent analysis by Prof. Paul Krugman. I always enjoy reading his columns. Astute individual.
Here is another excellent analysis by Peter Schiff, CEO and Chief Global Strategist at Euro Pacific Capital.
to understand why Peter Schiff portrays such a pessimistic view of the future. He lays out his logical line of thoughts and dovetails in the effects of rising energy prices. This interview helped me understand how deep the problem is.